50 Years of nascar racing ~ Viva Las Vegas (Post 35)

By Matt McLaughlinPost 35

Editor's note:
This article is part of a special reprise of Matt McLaughlin's "50 Years
of NASCAR Racing", written and published in 1998 in commemoration of
NASCAR's 50th Anniversary celebration that year. Matt has kindly granted me
permission to run the entire series. Please, sit back and enjoy as you take a
journey back through the pages of history and perhaps relive a memory or two. Many thanks to Matt for his generosity in sharing. God bless
you, my friend.

This week's history column presents a bit of a problem.
Because the upcoming Las Vegas race is the inaugural Winston Cup event at the
facility, obviously there's no great Cup race memories to relate. Rather than
dealing with epic races of yore, instead I'll concentrate on a bit of trivia,
the first, and until this weekend only, top rank NASCAR event ever held in Las
Vegas. That's correct. NASCAR ran a Grand National race in Las Vegas way back
on October 16, 1955. Recall that Las Vegas was still a relatively new gambling
Mecca back in 1955, with the first Las Vegas hotel-casino, the Flamingo, having
opened in 1946. It was rather like Atlantic City back then, only with better
weather and a higher class of mobsters, like the Flamingo's builder of record,
Bugsy Siegel, who had a rather unfortunate high caliber retirement party at the
hands of his rivals the very next year.

The Las Vegas race was held at the Las Vegas Park Speedway,
a one mile dirt oval that had started out as a horse racing track. Prior to
NASCAR's visit, the track had already played host to a Indy Car event in 1954.
The Grand National race was won by Norman Nelson, who had a two lap lead over
Bill Hyde, who in turn was two laps ahead of Bill West. Don't feel bad if none
of these names are familiar to you. To be honest, I had never heard of them
either. It was the only race Nelson ever won, but in light of the fact his
career included only five races, that's not too bad a batting average. Hyde's
career included 7 races, and West's 8. So how did these relative unknowns
(known only to their relatives that is) beat out the heroes of the day, the
Flock Brothers, Lee Petty, Joe Weatherly, Buck Baker and Herb Thomas? To be
honest, they didn't. Those drivers and most of the other stars of racing from
the Southeast were busy that day. NASCAR staged another Grand National race
that same day at Martinsville, which is where all the big names were running.
In those days Bill France often staged two races on the same day, one on the west
coast and one on the east, with both awarding Grand National points towards the
championship, as he tried to gain a foothold in the new markets in the west...
which is exactly why the Winston Cup series is going back to Las Vegas as well.

The 1955 event in Las Vegas was scheduled to be a 200-mile
affair. Unfortunately, there was a horrendous wreck on lap 74 that involved 12
of the 27 entries that day. The red flag had to be thrown to allow the wreckers
to clear the mess and that took a while. Nelson, who had taken the lead from
Lloyd Dane on the fifth lap, was still on the point when the action resumed and
never gave up the lead again. At lap 111 darkness fell, and the race was ended.
Norman Nelson won the event, at a blistering pace of 44.5 miles per hour in his
Chrysler. 13 cars were still listed as running when the event ended, leaving
one to speculate if any car would still have been running had the race gone the
full distance. The first place check amounted to $1325, which incidentally is
$225 more than Speedy Thompson got for winning at Martinsville that same
afternoon.

Thompson and Nelson shared a few interesting things. Both
drove the dominating Chrysler 300s, the two door version of the more sedate New
Yorker, powered by 331 cubic inch Hemi engines. Both cars were white; not
surprising, considering both entries were owned by the same man, Carl
Kiekhaefer, who as part of his plan to dominate stock car racing quite often
fielded teams at both east and west coast events. Of course, that meant both cars
were also sponsored by Kiekhaefer's company, Mercury Marine Outboards. Exactly
why Kiekhaefer decided that a race held out in the middle of the desert would
be a good place to advertise boat engines is a bit of trivia lost to history.

NASCAR never returned to the Las Vegas Park Speedway, and
the track was soon lost to the urban sprawl of Las Vegas. The Las Vegas Hilton
now sits on the site that was once the scene of Norman Nelson's greatest NASCAR
triumph.

AUTHOR'S NOTE: Thanks as always to Greg Fielden, whose
excellent "Forty Years of Stock Car Racing " series provides the only
account I have ever found of the less than momentous first NASCAR Las Vegas
race.

At present, Matt is not taking email correspondence at
Race Fans Forever. If you have comments, please leave them below and he will
read them at his leisure.

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